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Angelika Bierhaus, Karl-Matthias Haslbeck, Per M. Humpert, Birgit Liliensiek, Thomas Dehmer, Michael Morcos, Ahmed A.R. Sayed, Martin Andrassy, Stephan Schiekofer, Jochen G. Schneider, Jörg B. Schulz, Dieter Heuss, Bernhard Neundörfer, Stefan Dierl, Jochen Huber, Hans Tritschler, Ann-Marie Schmidt, Markus Schwaninger, Hans-Ulrich Haering, Erwin Schleicher, Michael Kasper, David M. Stern, Bernd Arnold, Peter P. Nawroth
Published in Volume 114, Issue 12
J Clin Invest. 2004; 114(12):1741–1751 doi:10.1172/JCI18058
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Figure 6

RAGE–/– mice are partly protected from diabetes-induced loss of pain perception, but not from diabetes-induced loss of PGP9.5-positive plantar nerves. (A) Immunohistochemical reaction of small fibers in footpad skin of WT and RAGE–/– mice with the neuronal marker gene product PGP9.5. The number of mice studied was 3 for healthy controls (black bars) and 5 for diabetic mice (gray bars). At least 3 visual fields were evaluated for each mouse. The mean ± SD is reported; **P < 0.005. Magnification, ×40. (B) Mean hind-paw lick latency in the hot-plate assay (50–C) in WT and RAGE–/– mice that were healthy (black bars) or had had diabetes for 6 months (gray bars). The number of mice studied was 6 for WT controls, 10 for WT mice with diabetes, 10 for RAGE–/– control mice, and 9 for RAGE–/– mice with diabetes. The mean ± SD is reported; *P < 0.05; **P < 0.005. (C) Extent of diabetes-induced loss of pain perception, evidenced by the increase (Ø) in paw lick latency in WT (light gray bar) and RAGE–/– (dark gray bar) mice. The mean ± SD is reported; *P < 0.05.